In late 2008, during the worst financial crisis of our lifetimes, Ben Bernanke did the only thing he could…
He fueled the fires of the recovery. He did everything he was allowed to do. Then he went to Congress so he could do even more.
Ben Bernanke was the Federal Reserve chairman during the 2008 financial crisis. And he had one goal in mind.
He wanted to stop another Great Depression from happening… at all costs.
Bernanke was uniquely qualified to do just that. He was a student of the Great Depression. He got interested in it as a kid. And since then, he has described himself as a “Depression buff, the same way people are Civil War buffs.”
Specifically, the Fed didn’t fuel the recovery nearly enough.
Bernanke wasn’t going to let the financial system fail on his watch. He wasn’t going to repeat the mistakes made during the Great Depression. Instead, he acted swiftly.
His actions fueled an incredible boom… one I hope you took advantage of. And today, the same story is unfolding… one you’d be foolish to miss out on.
Let me explain…
Money dries up during a crisis. If companies can’t borrow money, more and more find themselves unable to fund short-term operations. Paying employees – or even keeping the lights on – can become impossible. And that can cause the economy to fall into a serious and prolonged slump.
Bernanke wasn’t going to let that happen. So he cut interest rates to zero for the first time in U.S. history. And he didn’t stop there…
He also went to Congress and helped orchestrate $700 billion in stimulus. Much of it went into the heavily criticized bank bailouts you probably remember from that time.
After that, Bernanke kicked off years of quantitative easing… which eventually pushed trillions worth of liquidity into the system.
That was another first. But anything to save the day, right?
Bernanke lit the coals to save the economy. And it worked. We didn’t spiral into the depression that he feared was possible. But his policies had some side effects…
In short, they became the cornerstone of the longest bull market in history. It was a trend I saw coming. I told my readers about it in an issue of my True Wealth newsletter, published in July 2010.
Here’s what I wrote back then…
We now know what Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s playbook is, looking out three years.
He’s making it easy for us. In short, he will keep money as “easy” as possible, for as long as possible – likely beyond 2012.
For a visual… Bernanke is trying to light up the U.S. economy like a grill. He’s dousing it with rocket fuel and pumping away on the “start” button.
In short, while we didn’t see the runaway inflation in consumer goods that many feared at the time, we did see another type of inflation…
A massive inflation of asset prices.
I called this the “Bernanke Asset Bubble.” I saw Bernanke was doing everything in his power to boost the economy. And the obvious result would be a massive increase in asset values… specifically stocks and housing.
This sent the S&P 500 Index up more than 500% during the 10-year bull market. It was a phenomenal time to be an investor.
You might wonder why I’m giving you this history lesson. After all, that 10-year bull market is over now. And we couldn’t possibly see anything like it again… at least not anytime soon. Right?
Well, you might not want to believe this… But the same factors I saw in 2010 are in place today. In many ways, it’s even more extreme.
In short, the Fed has lit the coals of the next great asset boom. What it has done in recent months makes Bernanke’s “extreme” policies from a decade ago seem downright tame.
And as I’ll share tomorrow, they’re almost certain to propel stocks to incredible heights in the coming years…
Good investing,
— Steve
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Source: Daily Wealth